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1979

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Articles 31 - 60 of 66

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Special Edition 1979, Southwestern Oklahoma State University Jan 1979

Special Edition 1979, Southwestern Oklahoma State University

The Sig

The Sig Newsletter from the Southwestern Oklahoma State University College of Pharmacy - Special Edition 1979


The Use Of Video-Tape In The Acquisition Of Volleyball Skills, Arthur Johnston Jan 1979

The Use Of Video-Tape In The Acquisition Of Volleyball Skills, Arthur Johnston

Independent Studies and Capstones

This paper examines the use of video-tape as an instrument of teaching and evaluating specific skills required in sports.


Dichotic Identification Of Complex Sounds, Judith Larue Lauter Jan 1979

Dichotic Identification Of Complex Sounds, Judith Larue Lauter

Independent Studies and Capstones

This paper is a study of speech perception and related variables to better understand the psychoacoustics of speech.


Dimensions Of The Acoustic Reflex As Measured In A Background Of Noise, Robert Loomis Jan 1979

Dimensions Of The Acoustic Reflex As Measured In A Background Of Noise, Robert Loomis

Independent Studies and Capstones

This study examines whether background noise, presented at 10 dB below its reflex threshold, affects the acoustic reflex (AR) response for pure tones presented subsequent to the onset of the noise.


Early Linguistic Development As Seen In Four Young Profoundly Hearing Impaired Children, Thyra Cleek Jan 1979

Early Linguistic Development As Seen In Four Young Profoundly Hearing Impaired Children, Thyra Cleek

Independent Studies and Capstones

This paper studies the linguistic development of four profoundly hearing-impaired children, and how the children induced rules for developing linguistically.


Auditory, Visual, And Auditory-Visual Recognition Of Vowels By Hearing-Impaired Children, Zarita Caplan Hack Jan 1979

Auditory, Visual, And Auditory-Visual Recognition Of Vowels By Hearing-Impaired Children, Zarita Caplan Hack

Independent Studies and Capstones

This paper studies the auditory, visual and combined audio-visual recognition of vowels by severely and profoundly hearing impaired children.


Council - Nursing Practioners; Series Ii; File 35, Juanita Hunter Jan 1979

Council - Nursing Practioners; Series Ii; File 35, Juanita Hunter

Juanita Hunter, RN & NYSNA Papers [1973-1990]

No abstract provided.


Human Rights; Series Ii; File 51, Juanita Hunter Jan 1979

Human Rights; Series Ii; File 51, Juanita Hunter

Juanita Hunter, RN & NYSNA Papers [1973-1990]

No abstract provided.


Human Rights; Series Ii; File 59, Juanita Hunter Jan 1979

Human Rights; Series Ii; File 59, Juanita Hunter

Juanita Hunter, RN & NYSNA Papers [1973-1990]

No abstract provided.


Human Rights Material; Series I; File 87, Juanita Hunter Jan 1979

Human Rights Material; Series I; File 87, Juanita Hunter

Juanita Hunter, RN & NYSNA Papers [1973-1990]

No abstract provided.


Screening Of Clovers For Resistance To Clover Scorch, D L. Chatel Jan 1979

Screening Of Clovers For Resistance To Clover Scorch, D L. Chatel

Experimental Summaries - Plant Research

One thousand one hundred and seventy clover cultivars, varieties and crossbreds were screened in the field for susceptibility to the clover scorch disease fungus.


A Network Thermodynamic Approach To Compartmental Analysis: Na+ Transients In Frog Skin, D. C. Mikulecky, E. G. Huf, S. R. Thomas Jan 1979

A Network Thermodynamic Approach To Compartmental Analysis: Na+ Transients In Frog Skin, D. C. Mikulecky, E. G. Huf, S. R. Thomas

Physiology and Biophysics Publications

We introduce a general network thermodynamic method for compartmental analysis which uses a compartmental model of sodium flows through frog skin as an illustrative example (Huf and Howell, 1974a). We use network thermodynamics (Mikulecky et al., 1977b) to formulate the problem, and a circuit simulation program (ASTEC 2, SPICE2, or PCAP) for computation. In this way, the compartment concentrations and net fluxes between compartments are readily obtained for a set of experimental conditions involving a square-wave pulse of labeled sodium at the outer surface of the skin. Qualitative features of the influx at the outer surface correlate very well with …


Metcalf-Hatch Fact Sheet, Henry Spira Jan 1979

Metcalf-Hatch Fact Sheet, Henry Spira

Metcalf-Hatch Campaign

The Metcalf-Hatch Act forces tax supported pounds and shelters to turn over unwanted cats and dogs to New York laboratories. This creates difficulties for shelters/pounds. People who are aware of Metcalf-Hatch (MH) will tend to abandon animals rather than risk having them recycled into labs. And this places additional tax burdens on communities for rounding up abandoned strays. The cost of stray animals is already $400 million a year in the USA.


Early Diagnosis Of Relapse In Acute Myeloblastic Leukemia — Serologic Detection Of Leukemia-Associated Antigens In Human Marrow, Michael A. Baker , M.D., Judith A. Falk , B.Sc., Walter H. Carter , Ph.D., Robert N. Taub , M.D., Ph.D. Jan 1979

Early Diagnosis Of Relapse In Acute Myeloblastic Leukemia — Serologic Detection Of Leukemia-Associated Antigens In Human Marrow, Michael A. Baker , M.D., Judith A. Falk , B.Sc., Walter H. Carter , Ph.D., Robert N. Taub , M.D., Ph.D.

Internal Medicine Publications

Abstract

We tested serial bone-marrow samples from 47 adults with acute myeloblastic leukemia in remission for reactivity with heteroantiserums to leukemia-associated antigens, to determine whether imminent relapse could be detected in patients with acute leukemia. Of 26 patients who relapsed by standard morphologic criteria, 21 had increased immunoreactivity of bone marrow for one to six months (mean, 3.7 months) before relapse. High concordance was observed between a positive test and relapse during the period of study (chi-square = 27.53, P


Human Infection From An Unidentified Erythrocyte-Associated Bacterium, Gordon L. Archer , M.D., Philip H. Coleman , D.V.M., Ph.D., Roger M. Cole , M.D., Ph.D., Richard J. Duma , M.D., Ph.D., Charles L. Johnston , Jr., M.D. Jan 1979

Human Infection From An Unidentified Erythrocyte-Associated Bacterium, Gordon L. Archer , M.D., Philip H. Coleman , D.V.M., Ph.D., Roger M. Cole , M.D., Ph.D., Richard J. Duma , M.D., Ph.D., Charles L. Johnston , Jr., M.D.

Internal Medicine Publications

Abstract

A 49-year-old splenectomized man had an infection from an unidentified, gram-positive, rodshaped bacterium that adhered to the majority of his peripheral-blood erythrocytes. On transmission electron microscopy, the bacterium was seen to be extraerythrocytic and was 0.2 μm wide by 1.0 to 1.7 μm long. It possessed a thick, granular cell wall, a trilamellar membrane external to the cell wall and prominent mesosomes. Attempts to cultivate the organism in vitro or to duplicate the patient's disease in splenectomized animals were unsuccessful. The patient's response suggested that the bacterium was susceptible to cell-wall-active antibiotics and to chloramphenicol but not to tetracycline. …


A Comparison Of Amphotericin B Alone And Combined With Flucytosine In The Treatment Of Cryptoccal Meningitis, John E. Bennett , M.D., William E. Dismukes , M.D., Richard J. Duma , M.D., Gerald Medoff , M.D., Merle A. Sande , M.D., Harry Gallis , M.D., John Leonard , M.D., Branch T. Fields , M.D., Major Bradshaw , M.D., Hubert Haywood , M.D., Zell A. Mcgee , M.D., Thomas R. Cate , M.D., C. Glenn Cobbs , M.D., John F. Warner , M.D., David W. Alling , M.D., Ph.D. Jan 1979

A Comparison Of Amphotericin B Alone And Combined With Flucytosine In The Treatment Of Cryptoccal Meningitis, John E. Bennett , M.D., William E. Dismukes , M.D., Richard J. Duma , M.D., Gerald Medoff , M.D., Merle A. Sande , M.D., Harry Gallis , M.D., John Leonard , M.D., Branch T. Fields , M.D., Major Bradshaw , M.D., Hubert Haywood , M.D., Zell A. Mcgee , M.D., Thomas R. Cate , M.D., C. Glenn Cobbs , M.D., John F. Warner , M.D., David W. Alling , M.D., Ph.D.

Internal Medicine Publications

Abstract

We compared amphotericin B therapy for cryptococcal meningitis with a newer regimen containing both amphotericin B and flucytosine. In 50 patients with 51 courses of therapy adherent to the protocol, 27 courses were with amphotericin B and 24 with the combination. Even though the combination regimen was given for only six weeks and amphotericin B for 10 weeks, the combination cured or improved more patients (16 vs. 11), produced fewer failures or relapses (three vs. 11), more rapid sterilization of the cerebrospinal fluid (P<0.001) and less nephrotoxicity (P<0.05) than did amphotericin B alone. The number of deaths was the same (five) with each regimen. Adverse reactions to flucytosine occurred in 11 of 34 patients but were not life threatening. We conclude that combined flucytosine-amphoericin B therapy is the regimen of choice in cryptococcal meningitis. (N Engl J Med 301:126–131, 1979)


[Beta]-(2-Hydroxyphenyl)Ethanolamine Hydrochloride [2-Amino-1-(2-Hydroxyphenyl)Ethanol Hydrochloride], Alexandros Makriyannis, James B. Anderson, Joseph T. Dipiro, Edward Kostiner, Gilbert Hite Jan 1979

[Beta]-(2-Hydroxyphenyl)Ethanolamine Hydrochloride [2-Amino-1-(2-Hydroxyphenyl)Ethanol Hydrochloride], Alexandros Makriyannis, James B. Anderson, Joseph T. Dipiro, Edward Kostiner, Gilbert Hite

Publications from the Office of the Dean

CsH~2NO2+.C1 -, m.p. 441-449 K (from ethyl acetate), P212~2 l, a = 7.363 (2), b = 21.824 (6), c = 5.790 (2)/~, Z = 4, D x = 1.354, D m = 1.356 Mg m -3 (flotation: CC14-C6H6). The structure was solved by MULTAN. Full-matrix least-squares refinement converged to R = 0.057 for the R configuration and to R = 0.056 for the S configuration (P < 0.05). This is consistent with spontaneous resolution of the title compound, single crystals of which provided optically active aqueous solutions. A partially occupied oxygen site O(1)' is attributed to the oxidation of the alkyl hydroxyl group to a ketone during the data collection. The CI- is hydrogen bonded to H2(N)554, H3(N)555, and 1-t(O2)655 (2.37, 2-19, and 2.10 A). Both O(1) and 0(2) are internally hydrogen bonded [HI(N)...O(1), 2.41 and H(O1)...O(2) = 2.24 A]. Intramolecular hydrogen bonding may account for the unusual pharmacological properties of this compound in which only the N-C(1)-C(2)-O(1) and the O(1)-C(2)- C(3)-C(4) and O(1)-C(2)-C(3)-C(8) torsion angles (-41, -60, +122 ° ) differ significantly from those of other phenylethanolamines.


A Network Thermodynamic Two-Port Element To Represent The Coupled Flow Of Salt And Current. Improved Alternative For The Equivalent Circuit, D. C. Mikulecky Jan 1979

A Network Thermodynamic Two-Port Element To Represent The Coupled Flow Of Salt And Current. Improved Alternative For The Equivalent Circuit, D. C. Mikulecky

Physiology and Biophysics Publications

A two-port for coupled salt and current flow is created by using the network thermodynamic approach in the same manner as that for coupled solute and volume flow (Mikulecky et al., 1977b; Mikulecky, 1977). This electrochemical two-port has distinct advantages over the equivalent circuit representation and overcomes difficulties pointed out by Finkelstein and Mauro (1963). The electrochemical two-port is used to produce a schematic diagram of the coupled flows through a tissue. The network is superimposable on the tissue morphology and preserves the physical qualities of the flows and forces in each part of an organized structure (e.g., an epithelium). …


Ua60/5/1 Scrapbook, Junior American Dental Hygienist's Association Jan 1979

Ua60/5/1 Scrapbook, Junior American Dental Hygienist's Association

Student Organizations

Scrapbook documenting 1979 of the Junior American Dental Hygienist's Association at WKU. People included in the scrapbook are: Linda Carter, Mary Cloud, Elaine Collins, Marg Cramer, Carol Fabel, Debbie Harris, Beverly Harrison, Hope Johnston, Leah Mead, Laura Nation, Lesa Newly, Cathy Oliver, Cindy Rountree and Mary Lou Sallee.


Evaluation Of A New Zealand Tremadocian Trilobite, Anthony J. Wright Jan 1979

Evaluation Of A New Zealand Tremadocian Trilobite, Anthony J. Wright

Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A

Dionide hectori Reed, 1926, is shown on the basis of new collections from the type area in New Zealand to be a Tremadocian ceratopygide close to Hysterolenus. The species was placed in Taihungshania by Kobayashi (1941). It was provisionally retained in the Taihungshaniidae by Lu (1975) who made hectori type species of a new genus Hectoria (non Hectoria Trechmann, 1918). Ruapyge nom.nov. is proposed here for the reception of hectori. The original length/width ratio is determined by Wellman's method, with little consistency in results. Data from the strain ellipses constructed by Wellman's method are then used to calculate values for …


Relationship Of Age And Hypertension To Neuropsychological Test Performance, Clyde A. Pentz Iii, Merrill F. Elias, W Gibson Wood, Norman A. Schultz, John Dineen Jan 1979

Relationship Of Age And Hypertension To Neuropsychological Test Performance, Clyde A. Pentz Iii, Merrill F. Elias, W Gibson Wood, Norman A. Schultz, John Dineen

Maine-Syracuse Longitudinal Papers

Young adult (X- = 29) and middle aged (X- =50) hypertensive and normotensive subjects were compared with respect to seven neuropsychological test scores derived from tests on the Halstead-Reitan battery. Age main effects, with inferior performance for the middle aged subjects, were observed for the localization and time portions of the Tactile Performance Test (TPT) and for the Trail Making A test. The multivariate age effect was significant for the composite of seven scores. A multivariate blood pressure main effect was obtained and main effect blood pressure was significant for the category test; hypertensives made more errors than normotensives. A …


An Economical Microcomputer Design For The Generation And Display Of Timed Visual Stimuli: The Tdl Vdb, John H. Flowers, Mark H. Murphy Jan 1979

An Economical Microcomputer Design For The Generation And Display Of Timed Visual Stimuli: The Tdl Vdb, John H. Flowers, Mark H. Murphy

Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications

Recent developments in microprocessor-based technology should be of particular interest to psychologists concerned-with perceptual and cognitive processes. This paper describes the advantages of a Z-80-based system that uses the Technical Design Labs video display board (VDB) for the generation and control of visual stimuli.


Response And Encoding Factors In "Ignoring" Irrelevant Information, John H. Flowers, Jack L. Warner, Michael L. Polanski Jan 1979

Response And Encoding Factors In "Ignoring" Irrelevant Information, John H. Flowers, Jack L. Warner, Michael L. Polanski

Department of Psychology: Faculty Publications

Subjects classified either the numerosity or numeric value of elements in successive stimulus displays. In separate experiments, responses were indicated by oral naming, card sorting, manual tapping, and oral "tapping." Incongruent levels of numeric value slowed naming and sorting, but not tapping, when numerosity was the cue for responding. Incongruent numerosity slowed tapping, but not naming and sorting, when numeric value was the cue. Changes in stimulus response mapping may thus critically alter the ability to ignore an irrelevant stimulus dimension.


Ua60/5 Wku Dental Hygiene Class Of 1979, Wku Dental Hygiene Jan 1979

Ua60/5 Wku Dental Hygiene Class Of 1979, Wku Dental Hygiene

WKU Archives Records

Members of the 1979 dental hygiene class: Mary Cloud, Carol Fabel, Beverly Harrison, Leah Mead, Margaret Cramer, Debbie Harris, Laura Nation, Lesa Newby, Cathy Oliver, Hope Johnston, Mary Sallee, Cindy Rountree, Linda Carter and Elaine Collins.


The Changing Role Of Pharmacists As Evidenced By The Strong Vocational Interest Blank, C. Anderson Johnson, Timothy R. Church, Albert I. Wertheimer, Clayton R. Rowland Jan 1979

The Changing Role Of Pharmacists As Evidenced By The Strong Vocational Interest Blank, C. Anderson Johnson, Timothy R. Church, Albert I. Wertheimer, Clayton R. Rowland

CGU Faculty Publications and Research

The Strong Vocational Interest Blank/Strong Campbell Interest Inventory-Merged Form, or simply Strong Vocational Interest Blank (SVIB), is widely used to determine the suitability of a student's interests to a particular field. In the process of norming the instrument, data concerning the satisfaction of practitioners of a field and their responses on the instrument are gathered. Such data lend themselves to analysis of trends in the characteristics of those practitioners both over time and over the satisfaction spectrum. Hence changes in the field and characteristics lending themselves to satisfaction can be ascertained.


Behavioral Pharmacy, C. Anderson Johnson, Albert I. Wertheimer Jan 1979

Behavioral Pharmacy, C. Anderson Johnson, Albert I. Wertheimer

CGU Faculty Publications and Research

In the text that follows, the development of a coherent and recognizable teaching and research field devoted to the development of the behavioral and social sciences in pharmacy is proposed. It is important for teachers and researchers in this field to establish a common and recognizable identity; to share basic definitions, purposes and criteria; and to develop forums (such as scientific meetings ·and perhaps a journal) for the exchange and nourishment of the behavioral science knowledge that they generate. It is suggested that this field be called behavioral pharmacy. This title is suggested primarily because Of recent· participant agreement and …


Occupational Injury Control Through System Safety Analysis - A Comparative Study, Victor Aeby Jan 1979

Occupational Injury Control Through System Safety Analysis - A Comparative Study, Victor Aeby

Masters Theses & Specialist Projects

The study was a comparative retrospective analysis to determine the effectiveness of MORT (Management Oversight and Risk Tree), a system safety method, in reducing the incidence and cost of occupational injuries occurring at the Tennessee Wheel and Rubber Company. Implementation of MORT on April 1, 1974 at the plant facility allowed for statistical comparison of accidents between the time periods April 1, 1972 through March 31, 1974 and April 1, 1974 through March 31, 1976.

Data on injury incidence were gathered by researching the company's worker compensation reports. Cost figures for injuries were drawn from computer printouts provided by the …


1979 Summary Of Experiments, T N. Khan Jan 1979

1979 Summary Of Experiments, T N. Khan

Experimental Summaries - Plant Research

79MT22 Mid season sown experiment, Mt Barker 79BA25 crop loss assessment trials, Badgingarra 79MT49 scoring system for leaf diseases, Mt Barker 79BA24 Inter-plot interference at various distances in Net Blotch, Badginarra Research Station 79WH17 Inter-plot interference at various distances in Net Blotch, Wongan Hills Research Station 79BA21 Inter-plot interference at various distances in Barley Scald, Badgingarra Research Station 79MT23 Inter-plot interference at various distances in Barley Scald, Mt Barker Research Station 79BA53 Scald nursery, Badgingarra 79BA54 Net Blotch nursery, Badgingarra 79WH52 Net Blotch nursery, Wongan Hills 79BA20 Crop loss assessment, Badgingarra Research Station 79BA22 Evaluating differences in field reaction of …


Ua61/1 Wku Nursing Class 1979, Wku Nursing Jan 1979

Ua61/1 Wku Nursing Class 1979, Wku Nursing

WKU Archives Records

Members of the 1979 nursing class: Debbie Acree, Sharon Alvey, Mary Applehy, Benita Bramer, Mary Britt, Karyn Clark, Lenora Coates, Karen Covetts, Janet Crousore, Betty Davidson, Debbie Dougherty, Mike Edwards, Joy Embry, Patricia Eskridge, Jonie Farley, Lisa Farris, Cindy French, Janet Gary, Virginia Greenwell, Barbara Gregory, Deb Hertelendy, Anne Honaker, Linda Horner, Valerie Hosak, Nina Hurt, Teresa Jones, Darlene Kuchenbrod, Debbie Leach, Patricia Lyon, Sue Main, Joyce Mansfield, Susan Meers, Kathleen Moore, Marcia Newton, Joycy Partridge (?), Judith Partridge (?), Kathy Ricketts, Karen Roberts, Sandy Roso, Carol Schwegmon, Pat South, Marilyn Stewart, Teresa Thompson, Janet Vickers, Christine Winn and Retta …


Contraceptives And Common Sense: Conventional Methods Reconsidered, Judith Bruce, S. Bruce Schearer Jan 1979

Contraceptives And Common Sense: Conventional Methods Reconsidered, Judith Bruce, S. Bruce Schearer

Reproductive Health

Since the 1960s, the solution to contraception problems has been based increasingly on complexity, not simplicity. The oral contraceptive was developed in the late 1950s using newly discovered synthetic hormones that act in intricate ways on glands in the brain. Intrauterine devices were widely introduced in the 1960s in a host of scientifically engineered configurations that act inside a woman’s uterus. Nearly half of all married couples in the United States who use some method of contraception use either the pill or IUD. In examining emerging social trends and considering the special needs of some large groups for better contraceptives—adolescents, …